Anna Horolets


Ethnology in Central Asia in the post-soviet period


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Anna Horolets Anthropology in Central Asia

Ethnology in Central Asia in the post-soviet period 

After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the establishing of the independent 

states in Central Asia post-soviet science in the region has started undergoing rapid changes 

as far as ideological incentives as well as economic and institutional conditions of functioning 

were concerned. The change of the scale and intensity of academic research and teaching 

could not but significantly influence humanities and social sciences in the region, ethnology 

included. While assessing the influence of systemic change, one has to keep in mind about 

multi-vector complex character of the processes that took place in the region. I will try to 

demonstrate the impact of the transformation period on ethnology as a discipline, being aware 

of the limitations (see the introductory remarks). I will be interested in continuity with the 

discipline’s traditions developed in soviet period as well as actual and potential tendencies 

and directions of (paradigmatic) change. 

The centrality of nation/nationality as a subject matter for ethnology in Central Asia 

has remained largely unchanged after 1991, or at least so it seems at the first overview of the 

discipline in the region. Soviet etnos theory is very strong. When the former soviet republics 

of Central Asia have gained political independence, national culture and history has acquired 

a particularly prominent role in nation-building processes (cf. Anderson 1983). The imagining 

of the state in post-soviet Central Asia was in many respect following into footsteps of nation 

building processes of the nineteenth century Europe as well as twentieth century post-colonial 

nation building. It has to be mentioned that prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union the 

modern (liberal capitalist in particular) forms of statehood/governance – arguably – have not 

been exercised in the region. In other words, the political projects of modern independent 

democratic nationhood that are widely spread in political rhetoric of the states of Central Asia, 

constitute a challenge for political elites not only in terms of “inventing” and installing 

democratic and market institutions but also political culture responsive to regions’ specificity.   

The political incentives for the development of the discipline after 1991 were 

invariably directing it towards the studies of national culture to the end of reviving it after the 

decades of soviet domination that has led to the deterioration of  

1) language skills (especially among the urban educated population due to education 

system limitations),  

2) national customs and production practices, e.g. nomadic herding (due to the 

processes of collectivization and industrialization etc.) and  

3) religious belief and customs (even in the countries where Islam had had rather weak 

tradition prior to the establishing of soviet regime, the return to religiosity is conceptualized as 

a return to Islam rather than e.g. shamanism. This is arguably due to political pressures from 

Islam countries but perhaps also for internal reasons linked to state-building imperatives).  

Such disciplines as ethnology and folklore studies of the soviet era were well equipped 

to provide for the task of restoring fading traditions. Thus these traditions were continued. 

After 1991 the studies of Manas epic (Kyrgyz national epic) were revived, as well as the 

collection and description of the customs and material culture of traditional Kyrgyz (as well 

as other Central Asian “titular” ethnic groups’) communities – thus interest in rural areas. The 

nation builders were transposing the knowledge/findings of ethnologists to the level of 

ideology e.g. claiming that in Manas epic one can find “Manas Judgements” – the basic moral 

code on which the new statehood should be based. The symbolism and ritualism of state 

 

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building borrows widely from the material produced within folklore and ethnological studies. 

The new national narratives shift accents in the assessment of national history (e.g. the change 

of the assessment and conceptualization of Chinggis Khan figure occurred in Mongolian 

historic narrative from the interpretation dictated by Marxist disdain for feudal ruler to 

emphasizing his role in state building and belonging to rich Buddhist tradition presently, cf. 

Amogolonova, Skrynnikova 2005)). The importance of historic roots has acquired a different 

meaning – instead of relic or archaic past now an ethnic group is in need of “great” or 

“heroic” past, thus the national celebrations in the last decade included 1000 years of Manas 

epic and 3000 years of Osh (in summer 2006 while in Kyrgyzstan I have also seen a billboard 

announcing “2020 years of statehood”). Thus ethnology concentrates on looking for “deep 

roots”, “deeply embedded history”, “deep past of Kyrgyz nation”. Thus historical topics and 

interest in material culture prevails. 

This does not mean that the need of introducing changes into ethnology is not being 

articulated. In Kyrgyzstan, for instance, in the middle of 1990. the project of re-

conceptualization of humanities and social sciences was launched, which included several 

events and publications and involved academic institutions from the countries of the region, 

Russia and also several Western partners. Among these, an ethnological (i.e. history of an 

ethnic group) accent could be traced in the publication of Vasili Vladimirovich Bartold’s 

“Selected works in the History of Kyrgyz and Kyrgyzstan” (original dates back to the 1920.) 

It was published in 1997 in Bishkek by Soros Foundation in Russian; Foundation has also 

sponsored the translation and publishing of a version in Kyrgyz.  Leaving aside the fact that 

the texts constituting the book were written in a relatively distant past, this choice is telling for 

– in presenting the history of Kyrgyz nation as a continuous process rooted deeply in history - 

it emphasizes the changed meaning of titular nations in Central Asia in post-soviet era – from 

“small” nation of the USSR to nation-state status. The text was used in public and political 

discourse to the end of establishing new national narrative, one of the official publications of 

2000-ies is illustrative:  

 

“According to prominent Oriental scholar Vassili Bartold the Kyrgyz great power status is 



solely related to the Enisey Kyrgyz as one of the direct key components of the ethnogenesis of 

the Kyrgyz proper. This status survived for 80 years in the 9th century and covered huge areas 

of Central Asia” (Kerimbekova, Galitskiy 2002).  

 

The potential of change declared by the project was realized mainly in the change of the 



content of historical narrative as well as the changed evaluation of some events, not in the re-

conceptualization of the theoretical concepts forming the basis of the discipline. 

Ironically, ethnology of the post-soviet era perpetuates to a large extent the vision of 

(national) culture that is to a considerable extent substantive, primordialist and ideological. 

The works of Lev Gumilev have become particularly influential since 1990. Lev Gumilev’s 

concept of “ethnos” and his bio-ethnic theory that presents “ethnogenesis” as an elemental 

almost uncontrollable macro-process gained some influence throughout the post-soviet space 

and was also influencing ethnology. Several observations from Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan 

are telling: Kazakh National University in Astana (capital of Kazakhstan since mid-1990) is 

named after Lev Gumilev. In book shops Lev Gumilev’s books constitute the majority of 

what can be found on anthropological topics, his legacy largely influences the Central Asian 

perceptions of anthropology. This can be seen as a kind of paradox: Gumilev was a political 

prisoner of the soviet regime for the most of his life, yet he created a theory (or his theory was 

so interpreted and spinned) that was re-configuring and continuing the “materialist” vision of 

ethnic history typical of soviet ethnology, rather than undermining it. A more radical 

questioning or critique is still waiting for an influential articulation.  

 

4



An example of the debate that took place in Uzbek media and academic circles will be 

illustrative of the theoretical dilemmas that ethnology in Central Asia faces in the post-soviet 

era (Laruelle 2004). In 2002 Soros Foundation of Uzbekistan has published “Ethnic Atlas of 

Uzbekistan”. The publication edited by Alisher Ilkhamov (philosopher

1

, presently at the 



School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) of the University of London) was arguably 

“not congruent with an official view of nationality and was introducing western constructivist 

approach to its conceptualization” (Laruelle 2004). The publication was containing two parts: 

one devoted to various ethnic groups living on contemporary Uzbekistan territory (this was 

presented from the traditional “primordialist”) perspective, the other was devoted to the 

Uzbeks and presented a more constructivist view of the ethnic group. The editor presented the 

formation of the ethnic group as a process dependant on historical circumstances, economic 

conditions, political elites’ decisions and so on. The debate quickly acquired political 

dimension and the publication was used as a pre-text for expelling Soros Foundation from 

Uzbekistan. Atlas was considered politically intolerable for it relativized (which was 

interpreted as “de-legitimized’) the official national narrative. The hypothetical and 

constructivist approach to the nation’s history and culture was considered a violation of the 

discipline’s boundaries (one of the critics was attacking the editor as a sociologist (sic!) who 

brings methods and concepts incongruent with ethnology). As Marlene Laruelle argues, 

ethnology in Uzbekistan has still preserved two distinguishing features of soviet ethnology: 1) 

the orientation to the study of one’s own culture, and 2) rejection of the studies of 

contemporary life – the latter is seen as a domain of sociology (Laruelle 2004).

2

 The debate 



was continued in Russian ethnological circles and the opponents were invited to discuss the 

clash of theoretical paradigms in a special forum at Ethnological Review, a bi-monthly journal 

of the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences (no. 1, 2005). 

This further developed the discussion (cf. Finke 2006).  

The debate surrounding the Atlas indicates that the introduction of new paradigms to 

the discipline (and these are quite often coming from the West) is received with the mixed 

feelings of 1) the great interest in the new trends of theoretical thinking and 2) cautiousness 

with regard to having yet another dominant Others inserting their ideas in the field (especially 

since rather often these interventions are made with a degree of arrogance and “cultural 

superiority”). At the same time one has to keep in mind that the connections among post-

soviet ethnology schools and institutions are quite strong, and still Russian ethnology is an 

important reference point both theoretically and institutionally. The latter aspect will be 

presented in more detail below. 

 


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